Truth About Middle East is Spreading

Zero Hedge has published an article, “Are The Middle East Wars Really About Forcing the World Into Dollars and Private Central Banking?” that mentions my theory that Muammar Gaddafi was overthrown because he wanted to set up a private gold-currency in Africa. You can see my article here: Gaddafi Planned Gold Dinar, Now Under Attack.

I don’t want to give the idea, however, that Western powers-that-be were galvanized into action ONLY because of Gaddafi’s gold currency idea. Here at DB, we regularly discuss a wide range of strategic plans that the elites seem to be putting into place in order to advance what is commonly known as a New World Order. In this article, I want to touch on some of these again.

Certainly, Gaddafi’s idea probably provoked anger in the halls of Western power. As I wrote previously, the idea, according to Gaddafi, was that African and Muslim nations would join together to create this new currency and would use it to purchase oil and other resources in exclusion of the dollar and other currencies.

I was interviewed by the news service RT, and they called it “an idea that would shift the economic balance of the world.” You can see my interview here: Real Cause for Gaddafi’s Expulsion: Wanted Gold Currency?

It was a feasible plan, in my view. Gaddafi held some 144 tons of gold that he could have used to back a gold dinar, at least partially. Currently, I know of NO “mainstream” currency in the world that is backed by metals, either silver or gold. Less than 150 years ago money was considered to be gold or silver so we can see how quickly things change.

Iraq’s Saddam Hussein, too, may have incurred the wrath of the Anglosphere power elite that is evidently and obviously behind the world’s current financial system. Once he announced Iraqi oil would be traded in euros, not dollars, his fate was sealed, according to many alternative news sources.

In order to grant credibility to the above theories one needs to believe that the Anglosphere power elite is dedicated to defending the dollar’s dominance. In fact, the world remains dollar driven and the dollar remains a fount of Western power. So the idea that Western powers-that-be would defend the dollar is not a far-fetched scenario.

The dollar is even referred to as the world’s “reserve currency.” And this did not happen accidentally but through the most determined kind of power politics. Saudi Arabia is the key to the dollar’s pricing power. It is the famous Saud family (House of Saud) that refuses to sell their oil for anything other than dollars.

The Saud family is intimately tied into the Anglosphere power elite; the House of Saud is propped up by the West – militarily and otherwise – and in return, the world’s largest producer of oil, and the controller of its marginal price points, props up the dollar.

The arrangement is perhaps a convincing argument, by the way, against Peak Oil theories. What are the chances that Saudi Arabia just happens to be the Anglosphere’s biggest producer of oil in the Middle East and also the West’s strongest ally?

Isn’t it more reasonable to conclude that Western powers-that-be have RESTRICTED oil discovery and production around the world? Famously, according to a statement by one of the Forbes brothers last year, there is enough oil in the mainland United States to furnish energy for the next 1,000 years. That doesn’t even include natural gas (which is still flared off) and coal.

The world is likely drowning in energy. The scarcities that people fear are generated by the power elite’s dominant social themes – the fear-based promotions that are intended to frighten people into giving up power and wealth to globalist facilities such as the UN, IMF and World Bank.

What this seems to tell us, however, is that there is a bigger game afoot. Let’s go through them one by one to see if we can determine the true reasons why Western powers have been so aggressive of late in the Middle East and Northern Africa.

There is, of course, the idea that the US and NATO are fighting in the Middle East for strategic resources and military-intel advantages against Russia and China. The idea is that the “great game” is once again afoot and that the West is repositioning itself both defensively and offensively to gain maximum flexibility and power over potential adversaries.

A second idea, and one mentioned in the Zero Hedge article referred to above, is that the powers-that-be – the “banksters” running much of the West’s military machine – are intent on taking various public central banks and replacing them with private ones. The idea is that the Federal Reserve and other such central banks are actually private enterprises and that what the powers-that-be truly fear is the ability of citizen-led governments to print their own paper money.

Finally, there is a theory that has been advanced that we have offered in the past, which has to do with the establishment of a kind of Islamic “crescent arc” in the Middle East and Upper Africa. We’ve written about this numerous times and you can see our articles if you do an Internet search on the terms “Islam crescent arc” and “Daily Bell.”

This argument has to do with the idea that the Anglosphere seeks a wider war on terror in the Middle East and is actively aiding Islamic regimes in order to create this war. While this may sound far-fetched to some, the various regimes that have been destabilized by so-called youth movements (controlled it seems out of Foggy Bottom and Britain) are all secular. And the replacement regimes are all Islamic.

There is a great deal of turmoil and war now taking place in the Middle East and Africa. It is perfectly possible that one single explanation cannot fully encompass the strategic plans of the power elite that is evidently and obviously behind a lot of troubles there.

What does seem clear – to me anyway – is that the problems in that troubled part of the world are growing more severe rather than less. For whatever reason, or reasons, the power elite seems to want to ratchet up tensions and that determination seems stronger as time goes by.

It is a troubling phenomenon and one certainly hopes it does not lead to a truly severe and widespread conflagration. It needn’t happen, although I, along with many others in the alternative blogosphere, fear it might.

Posted by amanfromMars on 01/16/12 11:03 AM
There’s an interesting video on the contrived state of education assisting The Scientific Destruction of Minds For The Brave New World here, BTU … … Click to view link

amanfromMars, that is pretty scary. Charlotte Iserbyt’s writings are avalable as free pdf. downloads at her site.

Click to view link

The link in her site to american deception is even worse.

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Posted by taxesbyanyothername on 01/16/12 11:54 PM

Posted by Molly56 on 01/15/12 03:27 PM
It’s unfortunate that most people don’t understand what is meant by “competing currencies”. In the alternative currency crowd, none of the national currencies traded on the Forex are defined as “competing” as they all participate in the same international banking environment and are “created” in similar ways by central banks around the world.

What those of us who support this idea support is currency systems that are backed by real goods and services. In other words, currencies that in a sense are only a slightly different way of describing Bischoff’s real bills doctrine. In fact, Bischoff’s system, though it existed previously, would be one of the “new” competing currency systems… and a very competive (if not unbeatable) one. In his (if I’m understanding you right, Bischoff) the final redemption is in gold. That is one of the proposed systems.

I would love it if DB would do an article on “what is a competing currency” and maybe we could all argue it to our heart’s content. It would generate a whole lot more light than heat, I suspect.

Technically those national currencies are competing, just not very well. Ingo you can take this as a reply to your last reply to mine. Even if a sound foreign currency were used in an everyday transaction in the U. S., conversion from any currency to another is not something most U. S. businesses are prepared to do. Neither are they set up to convert back to dollars without incuring additional costs. So even though you can compete by using FX that competition is a failure.

The idea behind competing currencies is not just that we will use alternate currencies that already exist, but that people will come up with others. Inventing one that works well might be pretty tricky. Inventing one, not so much, let your imagination run. I would like to see that article myself, here or anywhere else. Edwin Vieira’s books should be some help. They are all on my wish list.

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Posted by WD on 01/16/12 11:47 PM

Does anyone know what happened to Gaddafi’s gold? If I remember correctly, much of it was stored in New York banks and Gaddafi had requested delivery. If this is so, I’m wondering if the war was started so the banksters could steal the gold while maintaining they delivered it to Gaddafi just before the war. Kill Gaddafi and steal the gold. The next regime would have no standing to demand it.

I would be interested in finding out where the world’s physical gold is both physically and ownershipwise and how it has changed hands in the last ten years. I’d be willing to bet the banksters are accumulating it.

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Posted by Agent Weebley on 01/16/12 09:08 PM

Posted by Bischoff on 01/16/12 01:40 PM
Question is, where would people rather live… ??? In IngoLand or in the CuckooLand in which you live… .

Hi Ingo,

I wrote a response, but it appears it got caught in the swear word machine. I’ll give it some time. I’ll check it every hour, on the hour.

Click to view link

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Posted by Agent Weebley on 01/16/12 07:36 PM

Posted by Molly56 on 01/16/12 11:22 AM
Ah, Mr. Weebley… you are such fun…

If I offered you the following piece of paper, would you accept it, or would you wad it up and use it to start your fireplace fire on this wintery morning?

1 (ONE) Boeing 737, fully operable and equipped, ready to fly and tested, all equipment in running order (see attachments 1 through 98, ammended to this contract agreement), deliverable on or before February 12, 2012, at the Everett, WA plant… [etc, etc]

Personally, I would not discard this “worthless” piece of paper. Not having a garage big enough to hold my “good”, however, I would probably take this “real bill” and exchange it to someone who did have the proper facilities to handle it–say… an airline company–and would take that “valuable consideration” (say, the president of XYZ Airlines’ summer vacation home in the Bahamas)and would call it a fair exchange. This is, of course a step away from barter, and seems on the surface not much more practical, but if you think about it, this is an example of an “uninflatable” form of real currency. It’s way more complex than this, but this is a start.

I will not go into more details at this time, except to say that “real goods and services” mean REAL goods and services.

Hi Molly56,

Thanks for the compliment. Ingo didn’t get my playin’ on words, it seems. Linton Kwesi Johnson is a master poet . . . you gotta listen to his words . . . taxes, slave labour and employers tossing you out the door just like that. Oh well, inglan is a bitch for true, is what we go do bout it?

We, at MetaPhoria, Eire go do sometin bout it.

But I digress . . . If you gave me a piece of paper representing a 737, I would gladly accept it. Judging by the value of ~ $1 million, it sounds like a late 70s 737-200? Have the CFM turbo-fan blades been X-rayed within the last 3 months?

But I am having trouble with your final approach on the matter: maintaining the value of the asset is only my concern when someone wants me to prove the value of my paper, which is difficult to do when I’m not in possession of the said plane, so you may as well give ME the plane and I give YOU some paper instead. Otherwise I may need to discount the paper unless you give me quarterly fitness certification paper and an arms-length revaluation; quite complicated, yes?

So if you lent me the plane, we could call it a loan? How much downdraft do you need on the deal? And how much interest would you want per year?

And using the plane’s value as security on things I want to do is difficult . . . the said plane is so bulky. I would need to generate a new piece of paper in the plane’s stead, so I may as well call it my “paper plane.” I could take the paper-plane to a financial meeting in the plane’s absence.

I could fire it across the table, hopefully not getting the potential claimant of my temporary asset in the eye . . . to really show them “I’m loaded!”

. . . on paper.

It’d be better to sell it to someone so they can fly it and make revenue instead of just being parked there like a lump. You should do that, rather than offering it to me.

The power elite’s fear of gold is similar of a vampire’s fear of sunlight, albeit a classical vampire at that.

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Posted by chad2 on 01/16/12 02:33 PM

I’d say… Not likely. It’s oil.

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Posted by Molly56 on 01/16/12 01:42 PM

Posted by Molly56 on 01/16/12 11:22 AM
Ah, Mr. Weebley… you are such fun…

If I offered you the following piece of paper, would you accept it, or would you wad it up and use it to start your fireplace fire on this wintery morning?

1 (ONE) Boeing 737, fully operable and equipped, ready to fly and tested, all equipment in running order (see attachments 1 through 98, ammended to this contract agreement), deliverable on or before February 12, 2012, at the Everett, WA plant… [etc, etc]

Personally, I would not discard this “worthless” piece of paper. Not having a garage big enough to hold my “good”, however, I would probably take this “real bill” and exchange it to someone who did have the proper facilities to handle it–say… an airline company–and would take that “valuable consideration” (say, the president of XYZ Airlines’ summer vacation home in the Bahamas)and would call it a fair exchange. This is, of course a step away from barter, and seems on the surface not much more practical, but if you think about it, this is an example of an “uninflatable” form of real currency. It’s way more complex than this, but this is a start.

I will not go into more details at this time, except to say that “real goods and services” mean REAL goods and services.

Oh, I forgot to mention…

This contract (which in our example we will assume to be absolutely genuine, issued by Boeing and signed with proper witnesses, etc.) with all its attachments and original signatures, weighs precisely 918 ounces.

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Posted by Bischoff on 01/16/12 01:40 PM

Posted by Agent Weebley on 01/15/12 11:44 PM
IngoLand is a Bisch for true, there’s no escapin’ it.

Oh well, I tried . . . you gotta love me for that!

Click to view link

Question is, where would people rather live… ??? In IngoLand or in the CuckooLand in which you live… .

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Posted by Molly56 on 01/16/12 11:22 AM

Posted by Agent Weebley on 01/15/12 07:22 PM
Hi iNGO,

“It is important to understand that the monetary system which creates redeemable currency under the Real Bills Doctrine involves no “credit”, whatsoever.”

Excellent.

Can I have 918 ounces worth of real bills, please? There’s a project we want to get off the ground.

Let me know . . . we’ll be there in a jiffy.

Thx
Agent Weebley

Ah, Mr. Weebley… you are such fun…

If I offered you the following piece of paper, would you accept it, or would you wad it up and use it to start your fireplace fire on this wintery morning?

1 (ONE) Boeing 737, fully operable and equipped, ready to fly and tested, all equipment in running order (see attachments 1 through 98, ammended to this contract agreement), deliverable on or before February 12, 2012, at the Everett, WA plant… [etc, etc]

Personally, I would not discard this “worthless” piece of paper. Not having a garage big enough to hold my “good”, however, I would probably take this “real bill” and exchange it to someone who did have the proper facilities to handle it–say… an airline company–and would take that “valuable consideration” (say, the president of XYZ Airlines’ summer vacation home in the Bahamas)and would call it a fair exchange. This is, of course a step away from barter, and seems on the surface not much more practical, but if you think about it, this is an example of an “uninflatable” form of real currency. It’s way more complex than this, but this is a start.

I will not go into more details at this time, except to say that “real goods and services” mean REAL goods and services.

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Posted by amanfromMars on 01/16/12 11:03 AM

Posted by BritishThermalUnits on 01/16/12 10:51 AM
Dottie “Our education system and our politicians are bought and paid for. True conservatives need not apply for jobs in the MSM. We only THINK we are free.” Exactly so but try convincing your neighbor of this.

There’s an interesting video on the contrived state of education assisting The Scientific Destruction of Minds For The Brave New World here, BTU … … Click to view link

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Posted by BritishThermalUnits on 01/16/12 10:59 AM

“Isn’t it more reasonable to conclude that Western powers-that-be have RESTRICTED oil discovery and production around the world? Famously, according to a statement by one of the Forbes brothers last year, there is enough oil in the mainland United States to furnish energy for the next 1,000 years.”

Anthony – enjoyed your essay. Sure there may be 1000 years of crude in the US but that doesn’t mean we can extract it from the earth in any kind of viable way. Read The Coming New Dark Ages. I can assure you that the major fields throughout the world are well into decline. In short – peak oil concerns are based on physical realities.

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Posted by BritishThermalUnits on 01/16/12 10:51 AM

Posted by dotti on 01/15/12 10:29 AM
In defense of the silver hairs:

I consider it totally unfair to blame the ‘silver hairs’ for what we are undergoing right now. My ‘authority’ on this comes from my own upbringing, which is the guides this perspective.

My parents believed what they were told by the politicians and the mainstream media-and the education system. In hindsight you could say they were duped and should have known better. In hindsight I would have to agree.

However, without the benefit of hindsight, they were acting in a rational and studied manner. When did our system become perverted? When was the time when action needed to be taken to avoid being swept into this current maelstrom? I tend to believe that the creation of the Federal Reserve in 1913 was the beginning of the end. Ingo would say that the original act was not a problem, I think, but it laid the groundwork for the future transgressions. (Ingo, I hope that I have accurately represented your view.)

The president that many consider to be our greatest-certainly of the 20th century-was in my opinion traitorous: FDR. The people of that day still had the innocent belief that America was the greatest country in the world-probably true at that time-and that their leaders were well-meaning public servants. Their only concern with bankers was with their local banker-whether their money was safe and could they borrow money when they needed it.

There were people who sounded warnings back then, but they were pretty much shouted down by the same type of elite mainstream politicians and media as we have today. The regular folks were trying to survive the Great Depression and raise their families, take care of their old, and create a better life for their children than what they were dealt.

A chess master plans five to seven moves in advance, if not more. The ‘masters of the universe’ so to speak plan well in advance as well. They exert a creeping control, setting the groundwork for their greater plan. The ‘how to boil a frog’ analogy fits well here.

My parents’ generation valued freedom over security. I remember in the 50’s the ‘debate’ if you could call it that, over ‘I’d rather be dead than red!’ or the converse, ‘I’d rather be red than dead’. Looking back, I wonder if that was the beginning of a new meme: how important is your patriotism to you? Then the Viet Nam war really turned things upside down. I believed that the war was right because our leaders said it was right. It was only when the media turned against the war that the ‘adult population’ became anti-war. And the anti-war sentiments turned into anti-establishment. I don’t suppose that the Viet Nam war was engineered by the PE to achieve their goals, but I think that that war, like many other things in history, became a tool for them. We are dealing with a very sophisticated adversary in the Power Elite.

Do I know their names? I could probably guess a few of them. But that doesn’t matter to me. There is a widening understanding that our democratic ideals are a fraud. I only recently heard of a book written in the 50’s describing Germany’s descent into the Third Reich: ‘And They Thought They Were Free’. Our education system and our politicians are bought and paid for. True conservatives need not apply for jobs in the MSM. We only THINK we are free.

Those of us who come here to DB have refused the blue pill. Most of our friends/neighbors/relatives would consider us to be ‘conspiracy theorists’-or at the least hopeless pessimists or permabears. They don’t want to hear our warnings. Their survival depends upon making do in this corrupt society. They are not bad or greedy or stupid. They are merely naive.

Some of us silver hairs were taught in our childhood that the Founding Fathers wanted to preserve the right of the citizens to violently overthrow tyranny. That is the real reason for assuring our right to bear arms. It was not so that we could hunt game.

I am not advocating violent overthrow of our government. And I don’t see anything that the silver hairs could have done along the way to stop the leviathan. It is a degenerative disease of sorts, predicted by Ayn Rand in her writings.

More later. Or not.

Dottie “Our education system and our politicians are bought and paid for. True conservatives need not apply for jobs in the MSM. We only THINK we are free.” Exactly so but try convincing your neighbor of this.

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Posted by Agent Weebley on 01/15/12 11:44 PM

IngoLand is a Bisch for true, there’s no escapin’ it.

Oh well, I tried . . . you gotta love me for that!

Click to view link

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Posted by Bischoff on 01/15/12 10:18 PM

Posted by Agent Weebley on 01/15/12 07:22 PM
Hi iNGO,

“It is important to understand that the monetary system which creates redeemable currency under the Real Bills Doctrine involves no “credit”, whatsoever.”

Excellent.

Can I have 918 ounces worth of real bills, please? There’s a project we want to get off the ground.

Let me know . . . we’ll be there in a jiffy.

Thx
Agent Weebley

Weebley,

You better get back onto your Meds…

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Posted by Agent Weebley on 01/15/12 07:22 PM

Hi iNGO,

“It is important to understand that the monetary system which creates redeemable currency under the Real Bills Doctrine involves no “credit”, whatsoever.”

Excellent.

Can I have 918 ounces worth of real bills, please? There’s a project we want to get off the ground.

Let me know . . . we’ll be there in a jiffy.

Thx
Agent Weebley

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Posted by Bischoff on 01/15/12 04:47 PM

Posted by Molly56 on 01/15/12 03:27 PM
It’s unfortunate that most people don’t understand what is meant by “competing currencies”. In the alternative currency crowd, none of the national currencies traded on the Forex are defined as “competing” as they all participate in the same international banking environment and are “created” in similar ways by central banks around the world.

What those of us who support this idea support is currency systems that are backed by real goods and services. In other words, currencies that in a sense are only a slightly different way of describing Bischoff’s real bills doctrine. In fact, Bischoff’s system, though it existed previously, would be one of the “new” competing currency systems… and a very competive (if not unbeatable) one. In his (if I’m understanding you right, Bischoff) the final redemption is in gold. That is one of the proposed systems.

I would love it if DB would do an article on “what is a competing currency” and maybe we could all argue it to our heart’s content. It would generate a whole lot more light than heat, I suspect.

You are understanding me correctly, Molly. It is important to understand that the monetary system which creates redeemable currency under the Real Bills Doctrine involves no “credit”, whatsoever.

If you understand that a Real Bill is not credit, but an asset which is completely negotiable the minute it comes into existence, you can then understand that the currency created to circulate instead of the Real Bills, is in fact an asset as well. You can save a redeemable currency, because it is an asset which can always be turned into the most liquid commodity on earth, GOLD.

In contrast, FED central banking monetizes government debt. The use of this currency is merely moving debt around. By using central bank irredeemable currency you have no ability to save, because all you would be saving is debt. It is for that reason, that we have the Social Security System created in 1935.

Currency created under the RBD is none inflationary. The problem with this currency in the past was that “idle” currency which had to be temporarily held out of circulation was improperly used by bankers for speculative purposes. This created economic distortions, and after several severe economic recessions and depressions, the Congress finally attempted to curb these improper bank practices with the Federal Reserve Act of 1913.

The big NYC banks did not like the 1913 FRA. Starting in 1920, the Governor of the FRBNY started to violate the 1913 FRA by conducting prohibited Open Market Operations. By reselling government bonds for currency, the NY banks inflated the currency to the point that by 1933 the original Federal Reserve System simply fell apart.

The Federal Reserve System we have today is a 180 degree opposite to the original legislation. The clever trick was to modify the original 1913 FRA to transform it with the 1935 Banking Act into a law which is in fact the very opposite of what was intended with the original legislation.

What people do not know, is that States favored the original 1913 FRA, while they were utterly opposed to the Banking Act 1935. However, by 1935 it was too late for the states to do anything about it, because they gave up their voice in the U.S. Congress with the ratification of the 17th Amendment in 1913.

There are only two currency systems. A “redeemable” currency and an “irredeemable” currency system. Period. A “competing” currency makes no sense. It’s like a dog chasing its tail.

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Posted by memewatchers.com on 01/15/12 04:44 PM

Oh and I agree with zero hedge and anthony, as i mentioned in the comment section of:

‘Well I thought it was quite obvious with Obamas New Year resolution banning trade with any entity that does business with the Iranian Central Bank. The goal is obvious use the Iranian nuclear threat as a context to shut down the competition of the Iranian Central Bank. Same thing happened in Libya, Syria, Iraq, and Afghanistan (well there they just tried to install a local branch). But it should be clear to nearly everyone paying attention now, It is all about the monopoly of creating money. The competition must be eliminated. ‘

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Posted by memewatchers.com on 01/15/12 04:39 PM

It should also be noted that the King of Saudi Arabia is a member of the most prestigious order in Europe, The Order of the Golden Fleece. Which is no small feat since members must be Catholic or at least Christian depending on which division. This is not just any order, when it split into the Hapsburg and Spanish divisions WWI followed soon afterward.

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Posted by dotti on 01/15/12 03:54 PM

Posted by Molly56 on 01/15/12 03:12 PM
Hi Dottie,
If anyone is still following this thread I’d like to comment on your excellent post. People may tease the DB from time to time for its constant reminding of how big a game-changer the internet is, but it’s still far too easy to take it for granted, especially by the younger generation that hardly knows (if at all) of what it was like before. There was NO SOURCE AT ALL for news except the MSM up until about the mid 1990’s. There were only cheaply printed and snail-mailed newsletters and rare radio broadcasts (which almost no group could afford) that presented an alternative view. There was no “search”, no google, no websites, nothing, NADA.

Our parents’ generation (and mine, which is beginning to turn grey) have only had access to the vast majority of this information for what… 20 years? The WWI generation believed what they were told because there was no one else “talking”. There wasn’t even cable television news (CNN, etc.) before the late 1970’s. How were previous generations who didn’t own the media supposed to know what was going on, much less do anything about it?

I for one am doing everything I can to make up for the lost time that my parents’ and grandparents’ generation didn’t ever have. We need to fight this fight together and not be sidetracked by generational fighting.